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IBM GLoBaL BusIness servIces
Executive Summary
IBM Institute for Business Value
Telco 2015
Five telling years, four future scenarios
Fundamental structural challenges in the telecommunications industry
– declining fixed-line telephony, saturated mobile markets in industrial-
Overview
ized countries, and threats from disruptive cost/revenue models of new
The telecommunications industry was entrants – have been exacerbated by the global economic crisis. Growth
already in the midst of a redefining shift in in mobile communications accounted for much of the industry’s success
consumer preferences, business models
and infrastructure development prior to
over the past several years, but showed signs of slowing even before the
the global economic crisis. Faced with current economic crisis. Mobile broadband growth, enabled in part by
structural challenges in declining voice the increased adoption of smartphone and netbook devices, is encour-
revenues, a maturing mobile industry and
aging. But it is unlikely to compensate for voice revenue losses as the
increased competition from new entrants,
the industry finds itself in dire need of new industry faces significant pressure to continue large investments in
models for growth. But a number of key ultra-fast mobile and fixed broadband capabilities to meet the rapidly
variables cast a cloud of uncertainty growing use of complex, rich content and data. This is amidst a
around the industry’s future requiring
telecom providers to prepare for several challenging funding environment and regulatory uncertainty.
possible scenarios and outcomes.
To cope with these challenges and sustain profitable growth, telecom
providers will have to prepare for a range of possible scenarios that will
largely be determined by how they respond to two key variables:
Addressable market growth – To what extent will the industry expand
or contract both in terms of revenue and scope of services?
The dominant competitive/integration model – What is the long term
viability of the vertically integrated model as “Over the Top” (OTT)
providers, device manufacturers, other new entrants and government /
municipality broadband initiatives fragment the marketplace?
Telecommunications

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IBM GLoBaL BusIness servIces
Executive Summary
• Clash of Giants: Market expansion gives rise to global carrier consoli-
dation in response to rising stakes from OTT providers and device/
Key Contacts
network manufacturers (OEM) who are extending their communica-
Global Telecom tions footprint. Users opt for shared capability aggregators (presence,
contact list, etc.) for telecom and online communications, triggering
Chris Pearson
carrier alliances around initiatives like Rich Communications Suite
chris.pearson@uk.ibm.com
(RCS) in order to compete with OTT offerings such as Google Voice.
Strategy and Transformation Mega carriers expand their market through selected verticals (e.g.,
Eric Riddleberger smart grids and e-health) and improved functionality.
eriddle@us.ibm.com • Generative Bazaar: Barriers between OTT and network providers
blur as regulation, technology and competition drive open access. A
Communications Growth Markets limited number of horizontally integrated network cooperatives (The
Nick Gurney Net Co-op) emerge, providing pervasive, affordable and unrestricted
nick@au1.ibm.com open connectivity catering to any person, device or object. A myriad of
asset-light service providers emerge, packaging connectivity with new
North America Telecom
services and creating new revenue models.
Judith A. List
jalist@us.ibm.com The scenarios represent likely industry outcomes at an aggregate level.
Each scenario is characterized by different service offerings, usage/
Southwest Europe Telecom consumption patterns, competition structure and infrastructure and
Mario Cavestany device availability. Investment levels, as well as revenue and profit
m_cavestany@es.ibm.com potential, also vary by scenario. To optimize opportunities for success
regardless of outcomes in 2015, telecom providers will need to under-
Northeast Europe Telecom
stand the criteria for success for each scenario, assess their current capa-
Ingo Zimmermann bilities against these and develop and implement appropriate strategies
ingo.zimmermann@de.ibm.com to narrow any gaps.
Latin America Telecom
Regardless of which scenario plays out, however, successful enterprises
Pablo Esses will share several common characteristics, including agile business
pablo.esses@ar.ibm.com design, a capability and culture of collaboration at various levels,
effective cost management strategies and service innovation.
Japan Telecom
Nozomu Nishikawa
nozomun@jp.ibm.com
How can IBM help?
Authors • Business Transformation/Optimisation: Simplifying business and IT
operations to reduce costs, increase business agility and flexibility
Ekow Nelson and enable migration from legacy to next-generation infrastructure
ekow.nelson@uk.ibm.com and business models.
Rob Van den Dam • Customer Experience Management: Use analytics to drive deeper
rob_vandendam@nl.ibm.com customer and network insight to enable differentiated customer
experiences for competitive advantage.
• Service Enablement: Service creation and delivery and digital
transformation to generate new revenue faster and to create new
business models and partnerships leveraging Telecom, Media, and
Internet convergence.
To request a full version of this paper, e-mail us at iibv@us.ibm.com